klr wrote:Bella Fortuna wrote:Agi Hammerthief wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote: I think Timonen was probably to some extent honestly believing that he was to run the store and that since he owned it, he could set it up the way he wanted, and that because of the large amount of work involved he could legitimately pay himself a salary out of it.
well if you look at the shitload of money he was aparently receiving per year for the work he did (not counting The Shop)
if the running of The Shop doubled his workload, it's quite natural to double your salary from the proceeds of The Shop (or proportional to the %%% of the workload increase)
I think it's up for debate whether the legitimate salary he was paid
was a shitload as far as what's standard/what the cost of living is for where he was (LA) - notwithstanding the fact that combined with his other paid endeavors it probably
did total up to a more than adequate income. The sum for RDF, in itself, probably wouldn't be enough to scrape by on in LA, though.
Nonetheless - not really up to him to determine what his employer would pay him - especially seemingly without that employer's knowledge!
That's the point. The law doesn't allow you to set your own remuneration, not unless you're self-employed. Whether you might "deserve" it or "need" it are also completely besides the point.
I wasn't talking about the law there, just about the direction JT's train of thought might have been going there:
1) I get x amount for z work
2) z increases by y%
3) I pay myself, from the company I own, that runs The Shop, that causes y% increase of z, y% of x in wages
because no matter how big z actually is,
if y% "feels" more than what JT agreed with RD to do for no extra charge,
this "feeling" generates a sense of "I deserve this"
thus his

as a reaction to the charges